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Program Information
Over twenty years ago, DU
Sturm College of Law converted its first-year legal research course
into the Lawyering Process Program, a broader legal writing,
research, and skills course simulating practice in a law firm or
similar legal environment. In LP, students learn the fundamental
tools of lawyering: analyzing and solving legal problems, and
communicating the results in clear legal form. In their second and
third years, students expand on this foundation through required
advanced legal writing courses and elective experiences in seminars,
moot courts, law reviews, and advanced legal research classes.
High
Quality Feedback
Students submit approximately ten writing
assignments each semester. These vary in length and difficulty, and
students receive feedback such as oral critiques, peer edits,
in-class workshops, and extensive review by LP faculty. Early
assignments carry less weight so students can learn by
experimenting, and receive feedback on their analysis that is
focused on improving the work product.
After students have participated in several low
pressure/high value
assignments and reviews, they prepare both
initial and revised versions of major assignments. To help with
revisions, LP professors provide comments on content, organization,
style and mechanics. Each major assignment also includes an overall
assessment so students can gain perspective on their work and
prioritize what they can do to improve.
The program incorporates at least two
individual or small group conferences each semester, both before
assignments are due and between revisions when students are focused
on putting the critique to immediate use.
Oral communication is often as critical to an
attorney’s practice as written communication. Each semester, LP
students are provided with opportunities to discuss and present
their analysis orally, including:
• A one-on-one oral report to an experienced
practitioner
• A practice oral argument
• A final oral argument before a panel of
practicing attorneys and judges in the courtrooms of the Tenth
Circuit Courts of Appeals, the Colorado Supreme Court, and the
Colorado Court of Appeals .
Fusion
of Writing and Oral Skills
The timing of most oral assignments in LP is
unique; the initial oral assignment takes place between an
original writing assignment and the rewrite. Because of this timing,
the LP oral assignments not only serve to hone students’ oral
skills, they also assist in sharpening students’ legal analysis. The
exercise of preparing for questions and orally discussing their
reasoning deepens students’ understanding of the assignment and
enriches the quality of their revisions.
A Continuing Partnership with the Practice
DU Sturm College of Law has a tradition of working hand-in-hand with
judges and practicing attorneys who provide a continuous connection
to the real-world practice of law that students are preparing to
join. The law school was once housed above Mapelli’s Meat Market in
Civic Center, just steps away from Colorado’s capital dome, downtown
Denver law firms, and federal and state courtrooms. The synergy
created by the law school’s proximity to local government, law
firms, and the courts fueled innovation in DU Sturm College of Law’s
teaching programs. DU Sturm College of Law founded the first student
law clinic in the country over 100 years ago, and the LP Program
continues that spirit of innovation.
Practitioners
For over thirty years, practitioners have worked directly with LP
classes as “Senior Partners” in a law firm model. These
practitioners provide concrete advice to students about skills and
ethical concerns as well as about legal research and legal writing.
Mentors
One of the most recent LP
innovations is the introduction of a mentoring
model. Instead of having one practitioner per class, LP is now
moving
toward a formally structured program of one practitioner (attorney
or judge)
per student. In the 2007-2008 academic year, a pilot program
provided
mentors for half of the first-year students, moving toward the goal
of
providing a mentor for all entering law students.
Judges
Sitting judges also participate actively in the LP program,
providing an integral link between the skills training that students
receive and the work of the most prominent figures in the legal
community who will evaluate the quality of those skills in the
students’ practices. Judges who volunteer to work with LP students
hail from almost every type of court.
Judges’ Day
Judges' Day honors members
of the judiciary from across the Rocky Mountain region and provides
students with the opportunity to interact with judges at the law
school. Each year since 2000, over 50 judges from the federal,
state, and local courts have participated in the LP Program as
lecturers, student argument judges, and participants in Judges’ Day.
The first event each Judges’ Day is a luncheon bringing together
small groups of students with federal and state court judges. Next,
judges present a program for students and practitioners providing a
judge’s perspective on what makes briefs and oral arguments most
effective. Then, a panel of the judges’ clerks share insights about
working for the courts. Judges’ Day culminates with oral arguments
in a pending appeal before appellate judges, and a reception
honoring the judiciary that includes a presentation of student
writing awards and recognition of long-time LP Program volunteers.
Rich Resources
Students have school-wide
resources beyond the LP professors, upper-class teaching assistants,
practitioners, and librarians that are the mainstay of LP courses.
The
Legal Writing Clinic and the Academic Achievement Program are also
fundamental to the success of students in the LP Program.
The
Legal Writing Clinic
The
Academic Achievement Program
Law Librarians
Program Technology
The
Lawyering Process Program hosted the 2007 Association of Legal
Writing Directors Conference at the Sturm College of Law (June
14-16, 2007).
Please click here to visit the conference website.
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